On Fri, May 25, 2001 at 01:41:21PM -0400, John Verne wrote:
> What is the default "strip" used by OpenBSD 2.8. When I "strip -V", I get
>
> "GNU strip 2.10
> Copyright 1997, 98, 99, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
> This program is free software; you may redistribute it under the terms of
> the GNU General Public License. This program has absolutely no warranty."
[ problem stripping OpenSSH deletia ]
> I had a meltdown a few weeks back, and expect I'm running the wrong strip.
You probably are. My OpenBSD 2.8 (patched from cvs) says:
odin@leia:p2[~]% what `which strip`
/usr/bin/strip
$OpenBSD: crt0.c,v 1.3 1997/06/24 17:15:49 tholo Exp $
Copyright (c) 1988 Regents of the University of California.
$OpenBSD: strip.c,v 1.13 2000/10/12 10:15:38 art Exp $
... and "strip -V" just returns an error.
HTH
-Dan
--
"There are two limits that this standard places on the number of
characters in a line. Each line of characters MUST be no more than
998 characters, and SHOULD be no more than 78 characters, excluding
the CRLF." -- rfc2822 - Internet Message Format